The Arizona Republic

NCAA to delay vote on athlete compensati­on

- Ralph D. Russo

MIAMI – The NCAA is set to delay a potential landmark vote on legislatio­n that would permit college athletes to be compensate­d for their fame for the first time after the associatio­n received a warning from the Department of Justice about potential antitrust violations.

NCAA President Mark Emmert on Saturday emailed a letter to Makan Delrahim, assistant attorney general of the DOJ’s antitrust division, saying he strongly recommende­d putting off votes on new name, image and likeness rules by two key legislativ­e bodies that had been scheduled for next week.

The letter was obtained by The Associated Press. The New York Times was first to report on Emmert’s letter to the Department of Justice.

USA Today reported Friday that Delrahim had sent a letter to Emmert, expressing concerns about the NCAA’s NIL proposal and the restrictio­ns it put on athletes’ ability to access the free market. A copy of that letter was obtained Saturday by the AP. “Ultimately, the antitrust laws demand that college athletes, like everyone else in our free market economy, benefit appropriat­ely from competitio­n,” Delrahim wrote.

Under the NCAA’s proposal, schools could block athletes from entering sponsorshi­p agreements that conflict with their schools’ deals. For example, a Nike school could prevent one of its athletes from striking a deal with another shoe or apparel company. Also, athletes would not be permitted to endorse products or companies such as alcohol or gambling that conflict with NCAA values.

Delrahim said the NCAA’s transfer rules could also be in conflict with antitrust laws. A proposal that would loosen restrictio­ns on transferri­ng athletes in high-profile sports such as football and basketball was expected to be passed next week, but now that vote also is being delayed.

“It’s extremely frustratin­g when we have so many people in the membership, so many presidents and (athletic directors) and faculty reps working on doing the right thing for students, especially around transfers and creating new opportunit­ies, to have to now say we’ve got to pause until we sort this out,” Emmert told the AP.

“Gosh, it just seems like no good deed goes unpunished.”

There already was momentum building among some college sports leaders to delay the vote on the NIL proposal, especially after the Supreme Court in December agreed to hear an antitrust case involving the NCAA later this year.

Emmert told the AP on Saturday he had been in favor of membership moving forward with a vote, but the Department of Justice’s concerns made a delay necessary.

“I am profoundly confident that we will get this done. That this is a pause, not a stoppage or a cancellati­on,” Emmert said. “It’s a timeout, if you will.”

Ultimately, the decision to vote or table the proposals will be made by membership, but Emmert said he expects his recommenda­tion to “carry the day.”

The NCAA Division I Council has been scheduled on Monday to consider proposed legislatio­n that would allow athletes to strike financial deals with third parties to do things like to endorse or sponsor products, make personal appearance­s or be an online influencer. Schools would not be involved in the compensati­on.

If the Council passed the proposal, it would go to the D-I Board of Directors on Thursday for final approval.

Now, the next step in a process that began almost two years will be a meeting between Emmert and NCAA lawyers and DOJ officials.

“We believe, as courts have regularly held, that our current amateurism and other rules are indeed fully compliant,” Emmert wrote in his letter to Delrahim. “Whenever we consider revisions to the rules, however, we of course receive input from many interested parties, and we welcome your invitation to consult with the Department so that we can hear and fully understand its views as well.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? Mark Emmert, president of the NCAA testifies during a Senate commerce subcommitt­ee hearing last Feb. 11.
SUSAN WALSH/AP Mark Emmert, president of the NCAA testifies during a Senate commerce subcommitt­ee hearing last Feb. 11.

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